Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts

Monday, July 22, 2024

Governer Robert Burns Lindsay and daughter Maud McKnight Lindsey Historic Markers


Maud Lindsey's home as it looks today

 Governor Robert Burns Lindsey July 4, 1824-Feb 13, 1902 


A native of Lochmaben, Scotland, Robert Burns Lindsey was Alabama's only foreign-born governor. He immigrated to North Carolina in 1844 and relocated to Tuscumboa in 1849, where he worked as a teacher and read law, obtaining admittance to the Alabama Bar in 1852. The following year, residents of Franklin County elected him to the Alabama House of Representatives. In 1854, Lindsay married Sarah Miller Winston, sister to John Anthony Winston, who served as governor from 1853 to 1857. the couple had nine children, four of whom survived to adulthood, among them educator and author Maud McKnight Lindsey (see other side). 
In 857, Lindsay won the election to the Alabama Senate. In 1861, he joined Colonel Philp D. Roddey's Fourth Alabama Cavalry, CSA. At war's end, voters returned him to the Alabama Senate. In 1870, Lindsey became the first Democrat elected governor of Alabama since the end of the Civil War. His turbulent two-year there in office amidst Reconstruction was beset by economic and political difficulties, compounded by the failure of a state-supported railroad venture. Declining to run for reelection in 1872, Lindsey returned to Tuscumbia, where he continued a limited law practice, hampered by ill health, until his death. 

Sponsored by the Maud Lindsay Study Club and The Colbert County Historical Landmarks Foundation Alabama Historical Association 2022.

Maud McKnight Lindsay
May 13, 1874-May 30, 1941

International educator and author Maud Lindsay was born at this home, then a frame structure in 1874. She was the daughter of Governor Robert B. Lindsay (see other side) and Sarah M. Winston Lindsey. 

In 1898, after working in a private kindergarten in Tuscumbia, "Mis Maud" crossed social barriers and established Alabama's first free kindergarten program in the working-class cotton mill district of East Florence. 

She remained the teacher and principal of the school for more than four decades. In 1900, Milton Bradley Company published Lindsay's first book. Mother Stories. She subsequently authored sixteen additional works, many of which reflected her childhood experiences in Alabama. Although she had no formal higher education, Lindsay became a sought-after speaker.

She lectured on the art of storytelling at New York University. Rebuffing many offers to teach elsewhere, including an invitation from renowned Italian educator Maria Montessori, Lindsey chose to remain in Alabama. Her childhood friend Helen Keller described her as "one of the truly progressive women of the southland, and an example of Alabama's true wealth and greatness." Lindsay was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame in 1995. 


Maud Lindsey Kindergarten Florence, Alabama 


Maud McKnight Lindsey 
The Florence Free Kindergarten 


Sunday, September 24, 2023

2023 Sep 22, James D. Vaughn, Old Jail Museums and David Crockett's Log Cabin Lawrenceburg, TN

 Today we rode to Lawrenceburg.

Our granddaughter didn't have school today and wanted to go to a museum. 

Just this year she has gotten interested in museums so we are always looking for a new one to visit.

Today we went to the James David Vaughn Museum located at the 

Visitor Center 31 Public Square Lawrenceburg, TN 38464. 

Opened Monday-Friday 9:30-11AM and 1-3PM  call to get an appointment (931)762-8991 

A Piano, Microphone and Worship and Service Hymns of James D. Vaughn 
Sheets of his music: Gospel Chime, Working on the Road, Hills of Tennessee, Jesus Forgives and Forgets, I Believe in the Lord, Jesus is All I Need, Talk it Over with Jesus, Love Lifted Me, My Loved One sare waiting on me, Heaven Must be my new home, and O what a blessing he is to me.

Vaughn School of Music 

David Crocket Log Cabin (Closed for Repairs)

Old Jail Museum Waterloo St Lawrenceburg, Tn 38464
Opened only 
Tuesday-Friday 10-2PM 
Please call (931-212-1944) 
Upstairs are the jail cells the Sheriff's office and the home. You can walk inside the cells that once housed prisoners which Ave didn't like She would not go inside the prison cell blocks.


News Paper Article about Sheriff Greg O'Rear killed by a prisoner. 

Inside the cell with prisoners

The museum had artifacts about people, places, Military Uniforms, School Uniforms, cameras of every shape and size, famous people from Lawrence County, Old Apple Computers, bicycles, quilts, etc. You just have to come to see for yourself. 
Our historian could go on all day and never cover everything in this build. It is loaded with information about Lawrenceburg. Well worth a visit.
A.L. Cantrell Lawrence Co Confederate Veteran 
I lived to be 112 years old 
Bet he had some stories to tell!



People from Lawrenceburg went on to be famous or important in different fields.
Senior Texas Ranger Captain, Bruce Casteel (also Texas Rangers Hall of Fame Waco, Texas) 
David Crockett 1786-1836 King of the Wild Frontier  
James David Vaughn 1864-1941Gospel Song Writer  
Silas Mercer Beasley 1834-1914 Early Settler 
Rollie D. Beckham (1879-1978)
Fred Dalton Thompson 1942-2015 Actor, politician, attorney, lobbyist, columnist, and radio personality
J.H. Stribling (1863-1951)Church leader, entrepreneur, financier 

Wednesday, June 2, 2021

2021 April 24, Touring the Antebellum Home of Presbyterian Minister Robert Donnell Athens, Alabama with Tour guide Alice Tiller

Pleasant Hill 
Home of Rev. Robert Donnell (1784-1855) 
Built abt. 1849 by Rev. Robert Donnell, a native of North Carolina, and his second wife Clara Lindley Donnell. 

He was greatly inspired by the Great Spiritual Revival of 1800 and became a Presbyterian circuit rider, one of the "flaming fires," so-called because of their spiritual intensity. Donnell held the first camp meeting in the settlement that became Huntsville, started new churches in North Alabama and Tennessee, and retired as minister of the Athens Cumberland Presbyterian Church. 

For his service and dedication, the North Alabama Presbytery was named in his honor. After the death of Rev. Donnell in 1855, this house and surrounding acreage passed to his son James Webb Smith Donnell. J.W.S. Donnell and his family lived here during the Civil War, even though he was wanted by the Union Army for aiding the Confederacy. 

In 1862, during the sacking of Athens, Federal troops camped on the house grounds, looted, and damaged the house through bankruptcy after the war. 
It served as a boarding school for boys for a time and later as the home of Athens School Superintendent, Julian Newman, and his family. 

 In the 1970s, a campaign to save and restore the house was initiated by local historians and authors Christine W. Edwards and Faye A. Axford. Local citizens, businesses, and Donnell's descendants contributed to the restoration of this historical landmark.
Pleasant Hill Historic Marker
Pleasant Hill Historic Marker
Donnell House
The Donnell House is located at 601 South Clinton Street. 
It hosts events throughout the year, such as a Christmas tree presentation during the holiday season. Because it is located on the campus of the Athens Middle School, students have conducted school projects, including interpretive videos that are centered around the history of the house. 

April is the month to showcase the local history in counties in Alabama by featuring walking tours every Saturday in April. I chose the *Robert Donnell House & Museum to tour it was the only walking tour that I had not attended. 
 *Tour options were: *Beaty Historic District *Downtown Athens Historic District *Athens City Cemetery *Athens State University *Houston Historic District All the above are excellent tours and many tour guides dress in the period of the tour. 
 Unfortunately, the Governor George S. Houston Library and Museum were not offered this year. 
 The Donnell House and Museum were hoasting a wedding later that day and food was being prepared and finger foods placed on the table.
Wedding Buffett
What caught my eye was the Armadillo pink cake. Hanging in the parlor were pictures of Rev Donnell and his two wives. 

Two staircases were leading to the upper level which showcased the history of the home and its occupants. 

 Outside was an 1830s log cabin donated by Don and Ed Horton sons of Judge James Horton and nearby was an herb garden. 

 I had driven past the Donnell House Museum many times but never noticed it until the tour because it was located in the Athens School system.

Saturday, May 18, 2019

2019 Shoals Front Porch Pop-up & Storytelling Festival

Shoals Front Porch Storytelling Festival 2019 
March 5, 2019, 11:30-1PM, 2019  Dolores Hydock Through the Back Door ~ The Music that Bridged the Bayou. Mardi Gras luncheon, Sheffield Public Library, Sheffield, AL

May 6, 2019, 2-3PM, 2019  Dolores Hydock Helen Keller Library 511 N Main St. Tuscumbia, Al 
Literary Treason the Writings of Bess Streeter Aldrich 
This program looks at the life and work of Bess Streeter Aldridge a Nebraska Writer of the 1930s who accomplished what a few others did:
While she raised her family as a single mother, she had a successful, self-supporting career as a female writer during the first half of the 20th century.
The program describes her early life and later career success and includes a telling of “Jundo Swans,” Aldrich’s funny touching short story that’s a reminder that there.
S no disaster like an elementary school play and no friend as important as your best friend when you’re ten years old.

May 16, 2019, 10-11AM Dishing the dirt Cypress Lake Golf & Tennis Club 1311 E Sixth St. Muscle Shoals, Al Sponsored by Muscle Shoals Public Library Tickets are $5 including a light brunch before the program call 256-386-9212 
Whether you’ve got the greenest thumb since Johnny Appleseed or you managed to kill a rock garden, you’ll enjoy these stories about Mother Nature, Frederic the French Yard-Man, and people who grow philosophy as well s phlox on their little piece of earth. 

May 16, 2019, 4-5PM Pop-UP Concert with Josh Goforth Florence-Lauderdale Public Library
350 N Wood Ave, Florence, AL  
 Storyteller, ballad singer, and multi-instrumentalist Josh Goforth is a native of Madison County in western North Carolina. Situated deep in the Blue Ridge Mountains, this area is known for its keeping of unbroken ballad and storytelling traditions brought by early Scots-Irish and English settlers in the mid-17th century. It was also fertile ground for the rise of American string band music played on fiddle, banjo, and guitar. Proud to share his Appalachian heritage with audiences near and far, Josh Goforth draws from each of these wellsprings. Join us for a FREE pop-up concert with Josh at 4 p.m. on Thursday, May 16 to kick off the Shoals Storytelling Festival!  

May 17, 8:45 AM – 5 PM (with lunch break) The Shoals Storytelling Festival featuring: Donald Davis, Dolores Hydock, Bil Lepp, and Josh Goforth
8:50-9:00 Welcome
9:00-9:30 Bil Lep
9:30-10:30 Josh Goforth
10:30-10:45 Break
10:45-11:30 Dolores Hydock
11:30-12:00 Donald Davis 
12:00—2:00 Lunch
2:00-2:30 Josh Goforth
2:30-3:30 Bil Lep
3:30-3:50 Break
3:50-5:00 Donald Davis (Went home at 5pm)
5:00-7:00 Dinner 

7-9 PM–Storyteller Showcase with Donald Davis, Dolores Hydock, Bil Lepp, and Josh Goforth

May 18, 9AM – 5:15 PM (with lunch break) The Shoals Storytelling Festival featuring: Donald Davis, Dolores Hydock, Bil Lepp, Eric Kirkman, and Josh Goforth
9:00-9:30 Donald Davis 
9:30-10:30 Eric Kirkman
10:30-10:45 Break
10:45-12:00 Dolores Hydock
12:00—2:00 Lunch
2:00-2:30 Bil Lep
2:30-3:00 Josh Goforth
3:00-3:50 Eric Kirkman 
3:50-4:15 Break
4:15-4:45 Dolores Hydock
4:45-5:15 5:00 Donald Davis (Went home at 5pm)
5:15-7:00 Dinner

7-9PM – Performance with Firekid, Dillon Hodges, and Heidi Feek

For the past two, days I have enjoyed spending time with my friends at the Shoals Theater Storytelling Festival.
Friday, we ate lunch at Legends(I think everyone ate lunch there) I enjoyed a plate of fried okra, fried shrimp, and Jack Danial's apples. 
Saturday, my friend and I shared a bowl of white cheese dip and chicken and steak feta for lunch. We topped it off with a cup of their complimentary ice cream.
On Friday and Saturday, we enjoyed listening to the following entertainers
Josh Goforth, Bill Lepp, Donald Davis, Dolores Hydock, and Dr. Eric Kirkman.
Josh Goforth is a multi-talented storyteller who uses a variety of stringed instruments for his ballads and stories.
His stories included friends and relatives, many about his tobacco chewing, never taking the shortcut to hard work grand-paw.
Bill Lepp's believe it or not Paul Bunyon tall tales!
Donald Davis's school days growing up and his jokester father.
Dolores's stories included a white cat, (Huck) a black cat, a speckled cat, and a one-eyed cat and the lessons she learned from them.
Audry Williams her side of the story of fame.
Dr. Eric Kirkman sings and uses musical instruments to tell the African American influence on American music.
Thursday Pop-up Shows 
Cypress Lake Golf & Tennis Club Dolores Hydock told stories about Dishing the Dirt from the Garden and we were served ham, sausage biscuits, fruit, pastries, muffins, orange juice, coffee, and water. There were door prizes.
Florence Library Josh Goforth played the guitar, a banjo, and fiddle, sang ballads, & told stories about life in Madison Couty North Carolina.

The storytelling festival has come to a bittersweet end and cannot wait until next year.



Sunday, July 23, 2017

2017 July 22, Events of the W. C. Handy Festival Saturday

I went to Visitor Center to listen to Tom McDonald talk about three of the books that he wrote and had for sale. 
1. Promises to Keep
2. Dirt Road Memories 
3. When Memories Come Calling

I should have bought one. 
I stopped to talk to Tom for a few minutes about growing up in East Florence. 
Tom said that he grew up on Sweetwater Avenue.
I live in East Florence but our paths never crossed. 
Tom went to Brandon School from the first to the sixth grades.
When we moved to Florence I was already passed the sixth grade.

Tom's family moved to the Central area around the time we moved to East Florence. 
We talked about Sweet Water Creek and walking along the old railroad tracks down by the canal on the bank of the Tennessee River. 

When we lived in East Florence my sisters and I would walk to McFarland Park to swim in the Tennessee River.
We also swam in the canal which was not far from our home. 
Tom, said once that he had tried floating down the Sweet Water Creek in a washtub and that he had hoped to make it to the Tennessee River in that tub, but it turns over and he never made it. 

What sweet childhood memories we both could recall.

Then I went to Florence Library to Watermelon Wine the Poetry of American Music. 

Where I listened to Anne E, DeChant sing and play on her guitar some of her storytelling songs (she was very good)

 I left the library and rode to Jack's for lunch. There I ordered a kids' Chicken Finger Meal which consisted of two Chicken fingers, green beans, Rice Kirby and Diet Coke. I also ordered an Apple Pie. 
I still had time to kill before returning to the Visitor Center so I went back to the Library.
There was a car show that was about to end so I stopped to take a few pictures. It was going to be long with walking so I just took several long-distance pictures. I walked back thru the Library and saw Anne DeChant and Frye Gilard standing at the counter in the Library so I walked up to them.
I told Anne DeChant that I loved her singing and playing, that her music reminded me of the storyteller and singer Tom T. Hall. 
She thanked me and said she appreciated the compliment. 
They were getting directions to Legends, where they were going to eat lunch. I said they have good food. 

 Then back to the visitors center for Swampfest Songwriter showcase series #2 to listen to Buzz Cason and Russell Medford sing and play. 

The audience sang along with Buzz in a couple of his songs. "Hank Williams Christian songs. One way I saw the light. Russell talked about meeting a couple of songwriters at Killen Diner (which has since burnt down) to write a song. 
The fun show ended around 3:30PM.

I rode to Taco Bell to get supper there was a line of cars all the way to the stop sign. 

When I got up to the window I said, you have been busy today. The girl at the window said we have been like this since 11AM today because we had four people to call in. What a bummer!!

After my busy day, all I wanted to do was eat my Taco Salad,  prop my feet up, and watch TV.

Sunday, May 7, 2017

2017 April 22, Saturday, Touring the Lairmore House Florence, Alabama Tour guide Billy Warren

One of the sites to tour during the Florence Walking tour was the Larimore House led by Billy Warren a retired school teacher.
The front side of Larimore and the tour group 
Home of T.B. and Esther Gresham Larimore
Mars Hill Academy, 1871-1887
Backside Larimore House
The Gothic-style house was built by Theiphilus Brown Larimore and his wife Esther Gresham Larimore located near the site of a foundry and arsenal of War between the states.
It served as a school from 1871-1887 to train ministers and Christian workers of the Church of Christ.
It was used in 1947-68 for classes at Mars Hill Bible School.

Theiphilus Brown Larimore was born July 10, 1843, and died March 18, 1929.
Brother Larimore began preaching soon after he was baptized and preached when an opportunity was given to him. He taught school at Mars Hill and preached three times sometimes on Sunday.
He preached all over the USA, Canada, Mexico, and Cuba.
Larimore died & is buried in Orange County California at Fairhaven Memorial Park Cemetery.
His second wife Susan Emma Page Larimore is buried next to her husband Mr. Larimore.
Susan wrote a column for the Gospel Advocate, Children's Corner, and several books.

His first wife was Julia Esther Gresham Larimore July 11, 1845, died March 4, 1907
Inscribed on her tombstone 
Went home Mar 5, 1907
A dutiful daughter, a loyal helpful hopeful wife, a model mother, a sweet singer, a truly conscientious consistent Christian, always consecrated Christian, always consecrated, and true to Christ and his cause, she was perfectly prepared for that sweet home where sorrows and said separations are unknown "where life is eternal and a treasure sublime. Farewell, sweet wife-by grace divine. We'll meet you "over there." your lonely husband. 

They had six children:
Mary Delilah Larimore George 1869-1959
Grandville Lipscomb Larimore 1871-1925
Theiphilus Brown Larimore 1872-1903
William Herschell Larimore 1874-1928
Julia Esther Larimore White 1876-1960
Andrew Virgil Larimore 1879-1972

Article from the Gospel Advocate 1870 Advertising the Mars Hill Academy
For males and females
This Institution situated four miles Northeast of Florence, Alabama on the highway leading from Florence to the justly celebrated "Bailey Springs, " will be ready for the reception of pupils by the first of January 1871.
The location is free from all temptation to extravagance and health and convenience cannot be excelled.
Boarding, washing, lights, and fuel $75.00
Tuition $20
The contingent fee is $5.00
Piano from the family collection
Mantel inside the Larimore Home
Family photos line the wall along the staircase leading upstairs
Billy Warren gave a speech about the Larimore House & several Larimore family members were touring the house for the first time, there to learn more about the history of their families. 
I joined several for a meal in the basement.
We were served pork, green beans, and sweet potato casserole with iced tea. 
I walked outside and took pictures of the Rose bushes in full bloom. 
On July 20, 2018, the Larimore Home caught fire and was badly burned not sure if it is repairable.
Power to the house was previously cut due to another small fire about ten days before the one in July.

Saturday, August 20, 2016

Coffee High School "IF these walls could talk" now only a memory!!

Home Economic Fashion Show Features Winter Scene

With strains of Winter wonderland filling the air. The annual Home Economic Fashion Show was held in the Coffee's auditorium on Friday, December 3.
Mrs. Gann and Mrs. Southern, the home economics teachers were presented with corsages in appreciation for their help in arranging the fashion show.

Home Economic Fashion Show

One student walked onto the stage modeling a sports outfit.

She is keeping in step with the latest fashion changes.
For she has chosen black tarpon cloth for her very stylish bell-bottom slacks.
Her slacks are fitted and slightly flared a the bottom.
For her jacket, she has chosen, red, gray, and black plaid cotton.
Her jacket features long set-in sleeves and a very low scooped neckline.

She walks to the edge of the stage, turns, poses, and exits the stage followed by other students.
Fads and Fashions during the 60s were pierced earrings, and paper mache pins for the Coffee girls.
For the boys are paisley shirts, new scrub denim jeans, with initials on the right back pocket, weejum shoes, and no socks.
The mod move is print shirts with London-look collars and cuffs which are paired with hip-slingers pants. The boys also are wearing London Fog Jackets in shades of blue, yellow, and beige.

The first semester was sewing.
The second semester was cooking, baking, how to arrange a table, flower arrangement, and furniture, and how to place furniture in a home.

1. Rich Short Cakes served with strawberries and whipped cream.
2. Waldorf Salad chilled and served on a bed of crisp lettuce and garnished with maraschino cherries
3. Italian Pizza -covered and refrigerated overnight. Brushed with oil added sauce and baked for 15 to 20 minutes at 450.
4. Pizza Sauce topped with, parmesan, mozzarella cheeses, sausage, smoked sausage, weiners, hamburger, and pepperoni.
5. Italian Spaghetti - brown meat in olive oil, drain and add onion, pepper, and garlic cook for 5 minutes and add all other ingredients. Cover and simmer for 2 hours.
6. Cherry Dream Whip- Graham Cracker Crumbs for the crust, dream whip mixture, for filling.
7. Refrigerator rolls
8. Types of rolls: Fruit Buns, Cinnamon rolls, Cloverleaf, Parker-House Rolls, Crescents Rolls, Braided Rolls, and Knots.
9. Notes on bread: Thick bread, yeast bread
10. Fried Chicken with mashed potatoes, salad rolls a cracker pie MEAL
11. Sunset Salad - jello salad
12. Baked Macaroni and Cheese
13. Tahitian Delight -Jello Salad
14. Never fail pie crust
15. Lemon Gold Cake
16. Lemon Butter Cream Frosting
17. We learned the difference between custards, pies, and puddings
18. Ribbon Sandwiches
19. Punch made with cool-aid, cold water, sugar, pineapple juice, grapefruit juice, gingerly, and lemon juice.
20. Chili Con Carne

Chili Con Carne
Next, we learned how to set a table and all bout the different types of items that go on the table.
What are the types of eating Utensils?
1. Sterling silver
2. Silver plated
3. Inlaid silver
4. Stainless steel

Silver Wear 
What types of dishes are used?
1. China
2. Porcelain
3. Earthenware
4. Melamine

How the pattern is put in China?
1. Hand Painting
2. Transfers

What determines whether the pattern will be permeant or not?
1. underglaze
2. overgrazed

Crystal fine glassware lead is added to the crystal.
We then learned about the different types of Furniture.
1. Early American Colonial American 17 Century
2. Duncan Phyfe Federal American 19 Century
3. Modern Contemporary 20-century
4. Victorian 19th Century
5. Eighteenth Century English 18 Century
a. Queen Ann
b. Chippendale
c. Sheraton
d. Hipple white
6. French Provincial 19th-Century

Types of Furniture
We learned about Flower arrangement
Finally, we had to draw a room using the furniture styles listed above.
It was a very interesting year and we learned a lot.
I love to cook and sew.
Designing a room 
History of Coffee High School before it was demolished in 2016.
Coffee Gym 
Coffee Front Office 
Back view











Wednesday, August 26, 2015

🚗 2015 ~ August 25, Tuesday, Murfreesboro, Tennessee


We rode to St Joseph Tennessee for lottery tickets. It was getting close to lunchtime so we stopped in Lawrenceburg at Ponderosa for lunch.
At 11:23 AM, I ordered a sirloin steak medium well, baked potato, and salad with iced tea to drink.
My husband ordered a New York strip, baked potato, and salad bar with iced tea to drink.
Filled up with gas at Murphy Gas at 12:19PM in Lawrenceburg, Tennessee.

We left Lawrenceburg traveling to Murfreesboro for a day of adventure.


We arrived at Stones River National Battlefields Museum in Murfreesboro around 2PM. We were given a brochure about the Stones River National Battlefield and the Trail of Tears.
We watched a five-minute video about one of the worst battles fought during the Civil War. 
Home Sweet Home, was probably the last song many of the soldiers heard. Many men on both sides perished the next day.
Stones River National Battlefields  Cemetery

Stones River National Battlefields Museum

Stones River National Battlefields Cemetery
After the video, we walked through the museum stopping to read and take pictures. In the gift shop, we bought four postcards.
  1. Battle of Stones River Murfreesboro Tennessee-More than 81,000 soldiers fought at Stones River, and 23,000 were killed, wounded, or captured. After this ferocious battle, fought from December 31, 1862, to January 2, 1863, the Union Army controlled middle Tennessee and prepared to advance to Chattanooga. The Chicago firm of Kurz and Allison published this print of the Battle of Stones River in 1891. Print Library of Congress
  2. Courthouse of Murfreesboro, print by, J.Thompson
  3. Stones River NB Murfreesboro, TN Hazen Brigade Monument   In the months following the Battle of Stones River members of the Ninth Indiana Infantry built a monument to make the place where their brigade held their ground against four Confederate attacks on December 31, 1862. The Hazen Brigade Monument is the oldest intact Civil War monument in the nation. Print Library of Congress
  4. Stones River National Battlefield Murfreesboro, Tennessee The last Confederate attack on January 2, 1863, drove the Union soldiers across the Stones River. The pursuing Confederates ran into a storm of iron from fifty-seven cannons and fell back. Union forces then surged back across the river bringing the battle to a bloody close. Print Library of Congress
We rode over to the National Cemetery to take a few pictures. We rode through the trail but did not stop to listen at each site because we did not arrive until late. 

Our next stop was the Oaklands Historic Home Museum.
The tour had stopped at 3PM we arrived at about 3:10 but that was ok because the curator said we could walk around outside and take pictures.

The once 274-acre Oakland Plantation was now a park and museum.
I took pictures of the markers telling about the Oakland Mansion, the Manley Family, Agriculture and Gardening, Oakland Mansion Watching from the window, official Symbols of Tennessee, History Tree, Tennessee Trail of Trees, Slavery, Plantation Life, Maney spring, Wetland Ecosystem, Wetland Plants and Animals, The Civil War, NB Forrest’s Raid on Murfreesboro, the Occupied City.
In the museum, I purchased a card by artist Phil Ponder that had a picture of the mansion and on the back the history of the mansion.
Oaklands Historic Home Museum

Oaklands Historic Home Museum Card
The Oaklands Historical House Museum
The Oaklands plantation began as a 274-acre land grant which was given as a reward for military service in the American Revolutionary War. The owner Colonel Hardy Murfree died in 1809 resulting in Oaklands being inherited by his daughter Sally. She and her husband Dr James Maney and their family lived in the one-and-one-half story, two-and-one-half-room brick house with wood plank floors. After Sally died in 1857, the plantation was passed to her son Lewis and his wife Rachel. Just before the War Between the States, Oakland encompassed 1500 acres and a beautiful almost 10,000 square foot home.

On July 13, 1862, Confederate forces under the command of General Nathan Bedford Forrest prevailed against the Union Army on Oakland property. The area remained in Confederate control until the Union Army won the Battle of Stones River in January.
Due to the ravages and aftermath of the war, the Maney family was forced to sell the plantation and eventually fell into great despair. In the 1950s ten women formed the Oaklands Association and bought the property from the City of Murfreesboro with the commitment to open the home as a museum. They did … in just one year!
The artist 
Phil Ponder, a resident of Middle Tennessee, has been producing for nearly 35 years, original pen and ink watercolors and limited prints of historic homes and important buildings in the area.

Our next stop was the Cannonsburg Village a Bicentennial Community 1776-1976.

Where I took pictures and we visited the tollgate, Uncle Dave Macon's marker, a memorial to Jessee Medick, 1900s Telephone building, University House, Ash Hopper, Williamson Chapel, Loom House (one-room Log Cabin), Rio Mill marker, Word’s Largest Cedar Bucket, Doctor’s Office, County Store, The McKnight House 1860, Village Loom House, Rawlins Tractor Shed, Leeman House, Haynes Museum, L&N Caboose, F.L. Westbrooks, Murfreesboro and the occupied & Stones River Region Car Club, AACA


Mill
In 1855, W.S. Huggins and Company built a four-story brick mill building on this site. It was powered by two twenty-five horsepower engines with a capacity of 200 barrels of flour per day. In 1860, William Spence bought the mill. Both the Confederate and the United States armies used the building. After the war, it was converted to a cotton gin by Farmer's Gin Company. Later owned by C.N. Haynes, it was demolished in 1990.

Gordon's School House
 The one-room schoolhouse shows the determination of 19th-century settlers to provide their children with a basic education. After a community had a building for classes, its citizens would hire a teacher with money raised by public subscription. Students were grouped according to grades, with girls on one side and boys on the other. All grades studied spelling and the three Rs. Classes would last only to fifteen minutes each, with two or three recesses per day. Since it was not possible to find an existing period schoolhouse, this one was created from logs that came from a large corncrib located in Southern Rutherford County

Williamson Chapel
The Williams Chapel relocated from the Northern part of Rutherford County and adapted from an early schoolhouse, is representative of a small country church in the South. Its present appearance gives insight into the evolution of the building. The original simple frame structure was updated by the more ornate Victorian interior and the stained glass windows, while the steeple represents the latest effort to modernize the structure. Churches of this sort likely served as a focal point for the circuit riding minister. He probably preached here twice a month and went out among the smaller churches on the other Sundays. The extended length of service hours compensated for their infrequency. Inside, the center aisle divides the church and the churchgoers; the women and men sit on different sides. Today, this chapel is used for weddings.
 


The Leeman House
The Leeman House is a two-story log structure from Eastern Rutherford County. The circa 1820s front section was made with cedar tree trunks fitted together by skillful notching. The second-story rear was a circa 1870s addition. The house layout is typical of Tennessee log cabins with a dogtrot between the living and kitchen areas. The front upstairs was used as a girls' sleeping quarters and was not connected to the rear upstairs, where the boys slept. Among the furnishing are an ornate mantel clock, hand-made doilies, newspapers used as insulation and wallpaper, and a print of Custer's Last Stand, together with the General's mess set donated to Cannonsburg by the George Custer family. The modern kitchen facilities are used for receptions when weddings are held at the Williamson Chapel


University House 
1800s residence with dogtrot. The dogtrot, also called possum or dog run, reached its peak in the South from 1780 to 1830. Since connecting log structures is difficult, a family in need of more space would often build a second room a few feet away. Both log rooms and their connecting 'dog trot' would be covered by a continuous roof. The chimneys, either stone or brick, were placed on the exterior to avoid overheating the house from cooking during the warmer months. During the hot summer months, cooking and other family activities were done outside in the dogtrot. This house, which formerly stood on the present site of the MTSU campus, dates to the mid-1800s.


Stones River Garage

Before we left Murfreesboro we stopped at the Wat Lao Buddhist Temple. I had seen a picture of the temple online and wanted to get a picture.
Phrame Thoranee:
The earth goddess, Buddha's protector
A beautiful lady with long hair releases huge amounts of 
water to protect lord Buddha from evil invasion right
before his enlightenment, and symbolizing land fertility.

Buddha
Wat Lao Buddhist Temple

We stopped at a Buddhist Temple in Murfreesboro. Hubby sat in the car while I took pictures. I met a couple that were a member of the Temple. The man told me the temple was a community temple, his wife painted all the sculptures on the site.
I was free to walk around and take pictures. The Buddha statue had a face on all four sides. I do not know much about Buddhism. I was told that in April and May everyone dresses in elaborate dresses and put on some sort of celebration. The woman said I was welcome to come and join in the celebration. There was a monk doing lawn work. Everyone in the community joins in the maintenance of the temple and grounds. The temple was not very large but it was very impressive. Who would have thought a Buddhist Temple in Murfreesboro, Tennessee



We also stopped at a winery where we purchased two bottles of wine.


We stopped in Spring Hill, Tennessee at Cracker Barrel for dinner. 
I ordered pinto beans, turnip greens, onion, cornbread, and iced tea.
My husband ordered the seafood platter, with iced tea. YUM!

The ride home was facing the sun, as the sun went down so did my sun Visor.
I had to raise my seat up to its height, instead of lowering it so my feet would touch the floor.
We were home by 8PM.

Oct 10-18, 2024 NCL Gem Canada and East Coast Cruise and Excursions

  I had a wonderful time on my NCL Cruise. We stayed at the Westin in Montreal for one night. Then, we took a 3 1/2-hour ride from Montreal ...